Rory McIlroy and Patrick Reed set up a mouth-watering repeat of their Ryder Cup showdown as damp conditions failed to prevent fireworks in the 82nd Masters.

And while Reed will start the final day with a three-shot lead on 14 under par, McIlroy will arguably have the momentum in pursuit of the win he needs to complete a career grand slam after a dramatic finish to a roller-coaster third round at Augusta National.

Reed responded to seeing McIlroy erase a five-shot overnight deficit by firing a hat-trick of birdies from the eighth and then making two eagles in the space of three holes on the back nine.

That took the 27-year-old five shots clear once more, but a three-putt bogey on the 16th gave the chasing pack renewed hope and McIlroy took full advantage with a birdie on the last.

The resulting 65 matched McIlroy's opening round in 2011, when he led by four shots after 54 holes but collapsed to a closing 80, while Reed's 67 means he can become the first player in Masters history to card all four rounds in the 60s.

"I got on a nice run on the front nine before the birdies dried up, but to birdie two of the last four holes was huge, especially with that up and down on 17," McIlroy said.

"It's massive to be in the final group for the first time here since 2011. I feel like I learned an awful lot that day and hopefully I can putt that into practice tomorrow.

"I'm really excited to show everyone what I've got, to show Patrick Reed what I've got and all the pressure is on him. He went to Augusta State and has a lot of support and I'm hoping to come in here and spoil the party."

On a day when intermittent showers helped making scoring easier, Rickie Fowler is five shots off the lead after a 65 which equalled the lowest round of the week posted minutes earlier by Spain's Jon Rahm.

Rahm is six off the lead on eight under, with Henrik Stenson a shot further back and European number one Tommy Fleetwood, Bubba Watson and Marc Leishman on six under.

McIlroy began the day five shots off the lead held by Reed, but birdied the third and fourth and then almost holed his tee shot on the par-three sixth. And the best was yet to come as the former world number one chipped in for an eagle on the par-five eighth.

That briefly gave McIlroy a share of the lead, only for Reed to respond with a hat-trick of birdies from the eighth - the fifth time this week he has compiled such a scoring burst.

A bogey on the 12th cut Reed's lead to two, but he responded with an eagle on the 13th - where McIlroy had to save par from deep in the Azaleas left of the green - to move four shots clear.

McIlroy recovered from a wild drive to birdie the 15th and reduce the deficit once more, only for Reed to chip in for his second eagle of the day on the same hole.

McIlroy added: "I feel like I learned an awful lot that day (in 2011) and hopefully I can put that into practice tomorrow.

"I've been waiting for this chance, to be honest. I always have said that 2011 was a huge turning point in my career. It was the day that I realised I wasn't ready to win major championships, and I needed to reflect on that and realise what I needed to do differently.

"But now I am ready. Obviously I'm not in the lead like I was going into that day, so I probably don't have as much pressure. I don't have to protect anything. I can go out and sort of freewheel like I did today, which is a great position to be in.

"I wish I was a little closer to the lead or leading, but I'm in the final group and I've shot 65 on moving day at the Masters. It's all I can ask for.

"I'm really excited to show everyone what I've got, to show Patrick Reed what I've got and all the pressure is on him. He went to Augusta State and has a lot of support and I'm hoping to come in here and spoil the party.

"Patrick's got a three shot lead, I feel like all the pressure's on him. He's got a few guys chasing him who are pretty big time players. He's got that to sleep on tonight.

"I don't feel like there's any shot on the golf course that I can't execute and I'm much more relaxed. This isn't my first time in this position. I've been able to close the deal a few times before this.

"Patrick's going for his first (major title) and I'm going for something else."

Reed said: "It's going to be a lot of fun. Obviously we're both playing really solid golf to be able to go into a final round on Sunday at the first major. But really I'm just going to do my thing and stick to my game plan and go out and enjoy my Sunday.

"I'm not out there to play Rory. I'm out there to play the golf course. The biggest thing I can pull from Hazeltine is I was going head to head with Rory and was able to put together a really good round, and when he tried to make a counter, I was able to always stay ahead and keep going."

Asked about McIlroy saying the pressure was all on him, Reed added: "I am leading, so I guess so. But at the same time, he's trying to go for the career grand slam. You can put it either way.

"It's going to be electrifying. The fans are going to be ready to go, they are going to be ready to cheer for whoever is making putts, whoever is making birdies or pulling off shots.

"It's just going to be one of those days you just need to go out and be able to put your nose to the grind and just play some golf."